If you consider yourself a good judge on what is superior entertainment for all the key sought after demographics yet don't want to disclose specifics here, then I challenge you to march right down to your GM's office and tell him or her your plans. Of course the tough part, and what your GM will require, is remaining focused on the fact that radio is a business, one apparently paying your bills on a monthly basis. Be sure to then come back and tell us how your meeting goes.
Scold much?
Gooroo, I enjoy our debate tremendously because you are well spoken, thoughtful, and bordering on intelligent, and you make me feel like I might be too, just by participating.
But this new turn away from the discussion into some imagined high noon showdown in the market manager's office wherein I let him and his skype-present corporate majors know everything they're doing wrong and handing them a list of changes, is pretty naive as notions go.
Hope you can settle for a response here, in the more appropriate forum.
There is entertainment on the radio, but not everywhere, and certainly less so now when it is needed most in the face of available and emerging competition for attention. If you're going to compare that competition to Walkmans, you're in a universe I have no interest in approaching. But if you're willing to acknowledge the massive content alternatives now and soon available at a screen touch, read on.
A 22 year old male has a smartphone. It is his main source of portable entertainment. When he is not accessing facebook or twitter, or chatting, he is listening to or watching music, a piece or 2 from The Daily Show and SNL, a little Family Guy and South Park, or one of millions of truly entertaining bits of fun on his device. If this guy is not smack in the center of the curve, he soon will be. Agreed?
Presently he has some ancestral urge to hear something "live and local", he pulls up a radio station stream already listed by the appropriate app. There is a dj performing formatics before a cluster of spots. The jock is very excited about a station birthday party in which our fellow has no interest. The jock is very excited about a song coming up "next" (which means several annoying messages will happen before the music does), a song in which our fellow has some vague interest, and is reminded to check out the video performance on youtube before he forgets.
I'm trying hard with a vivid imagination, to devine the entertainment value of that interlude with radio. Do you disagree whether it is typical?
Say he tuned in during a favorite song (not by coincidence, as research placed it perfectly in a set that would happen for best PPM mileage), just as the song fades out and our fellow was prepared for a brief afterglow, he is bludgeoned by 10 seconds worth of reminder, in echoes and repeats, in stutters and thunders and lasers (still!) that he is in fact listening to the station who's calls are already displayed on his device. He no longer finds the station useful to his day.
In a stunning act of implausable tenacity, our fellow toons in to a morning show the next morning. It is 2 --no, 3...oh there's a fourth -- voices talking about one of the voices having been cut off on the freeway on the way into "the show". Another voice begins to describe a similar experience yesterday afternoon, during which fingers were used. All laugh. One of the voices, a female, chimed in that her child of 7 used that same gesture, and so all involved in the discussion decided they leave it open to the audience to call in with suggestions whether the gesture is a swear word or not.
Our fellow yawned as I am doing now. The examples are real and typical.
Gooroo, this is your radio "entertainment. It has no value to so many people with such thrilling alternatives. I do allow that talk radio shows have their great appeal to those who enjoy the personalities and subjects, which is an example of exception to the dearth of entertainment on the radio, so I refer to pop music radio.
Dead, it seems clearly like you aren't very happy, nor enjoying the radio business anymore.
Not at all. You really missed the mark there. Either learn how better to read a person's sensibility through his posts, or entertain alternatives to disposition interpretation.
come up with your magic bullet that will transform radio into something that is economy proof and resistant to evolving technology.
Pop radio needs talent to present the music. More talent than is currently manning the medium. More cues need to be taken from the Ron Jacobs and Bill Drakes of the past to create a workable formula today. Recognise what is wrong, envision extreme changes to accomodate solutions, lead relentlessly, focus on the vision. Hire entertainers. Demand from individuals daily creative contributions that at once fit the vision, and are far in left field of the vision. Guide doggedly. Collectively be able to form content that equals and surpasses what is already available. Evolve that content constantly. Research and consulting are the sawzall of tools. Use sparingly for a precision product.
Try to think of the above not as a list of bromides, but simply titles of the larger actions they represent. The "magic bullet" doesn't come from a list of neat ideas given on a comments board or in a GM's office, but from application of the above. Only. If it can't be done, it can't be done...the audience doesn't judge which entertainment is possible with today's market realities or whatever, only whether it exists and can be used.